Potty-training your toddler may seem like a daunting task, as there's so many different ways that parents can go about it.
But one Scottish mum has hailed a foolproof method that she says works in just 72 hours, and has shared it with anyone that may be struggling with the process.
Courtney Ryrie is a parenting influencer who often shares helpful hacks for fellow caregivers, and she says that one trick helped to potty train her two-year-old son in just a couple of days.
All parents need to do is learn about the so-called 3P rule, which involves practising 'persistence, patience and praise'.
The Mirror reports that Courtney made a TikTok video where she explained the rule, outlining everything that parents need to do in order to get the best results.
The woman, who goes by the username @scottishcourt, revealed: "Just to prepare you guys before you make plans, your child is going to be naked the whole three days and you will not be able to leave the house at all for those three days, so make sure you plan around a time you don't have to go out and do anything."
To start with, Courtney explained that parents need to be giving their toddler plenty to drink and putting them on the potty every 10 minutes on the first day.
She said: "Persistence. This is the most important in the first day, or however long it takes for your child to grasp it.
"Personally for us, it was one day to know where the pee goes. Every ten minutes you're going to put your child on the toilet and say 'Do you need to go?'.
"The whole day you're going to fill them up with juice, any juice they want. For three days it's not going to matter. And every single ten minutes, toilet. Toilet. Toilet. You do that until it's bedtime."
She continued: "Now while our son was in the toilet we'd let him use his iPad to keep him on it because at first he was like get me away. But after a couple of times, he got the gist.
"He got his iPad so he wanted to go on it. And he kind of tried tricking us sometimes by sitting on it for like 20 minutes so he could watch 20 minutes on his iPad, but we kind of let it pass the first day because it is his first day.
"At the end of the first day, he knew, 'Wait, I need to pee', so he'd come and get us so we'd take him to the toilet. By the time the second day came, he was going to the toilet by himself. That was great for us."
Patience is also highly important, as it's likely your child will have a few 'accidents' along the way.
Courtney explained: " If you make them feel negative about it, they won't want to do it anymore.
"By the end of the first day, the accidents reduced a lot, and we had no accidents for us personally on the second day in regards to the peeing department."
Positive reinforcement is the final step to this method, which is why Courtney and her husband made sure to reward their child each time he used the potty.
She added: "You cheer, you celebrate them, lift them up, give them - whether it be a sticker, candy, a toy, whatever you think will motivate them.
"By the end of day one, Kolsyn was coming to get us every single time he needed the bathroom for us to take him to the potty. By the end of day two, the beginning of day three, he was going all by himself. Honestly, I was so shocked at how fast he did it!"
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